12 January 2012, 16:15
Ernst-Abbe-Platz 2, seminar room 3423
Wiley Registry of Tandem Mass Spectral Data
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Herbert Oberacher (Institute of Legal Medicine, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria) Read More
12 January 2012, 16:15
Ernst-Abbe-Platz 2, seminar room 3423
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Herbert Oberacher (Institute of Legal Medicine, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria) Read More
9 January 2012, 11:00
Ernst-Abbe-Platz 2, seminar room 3423
Tsvi Tlutsy (Dept. of Complex Systems, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel) Read More
The Workshop will be the 9th in a series of annual International Workshops on Systems Biology held in Jena and organised by the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology – Hans Knoell Institute Jena. In 2011, the workshop will have its focus on data and knowledge based modelling and model-driven analysis of microbial infection processes.
Organization: The workshop is organised by PD Dr Reinhard Guthke and Prof Dr Thilo Figge from the Systems Biology Groups of the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology – Hans Knoell Institute together with BioControl Jena GmbH.
Contact: reinhard.guthke [at] hki-jena.de
For regularly updated information on the event and the programme of the Workshop, please refer to www.biocontrol-jena.com
The Jena Centre for Bioinformatics holds its annual workshop, this year themed
Campus Ernst-Abbe-Platz, Jena (Carl-Zeiss-Str. 3, lecture room 5)
Download programme and abstracts (pdf)
IOMPA 2010, a workshop dedicated at the Integration of OMICS Datasets into Metabolic Pathway Analysis will be held in Edinburgh, Scotland on October 15, 2010 in the Edinburgh International Conference Centre. The aim of this workshop is to discuss issues arising in the integration of experimental data into the analysis of metabolic networks. It is split into three parts each of which covers one of the central topics arising in this kind of analysis. The first session is dedicated towards genome-scale metabolic networks and will cover issues arising in the reconstruction of such networks. The aim of the second session is to discuss different types of structural properties of metabolic networks that can be used to characterize them. These structural properties reach from connected routes in a graph-based representation of metabolic network, over stoichiometrically balanced fluxes in the form of elementary flux modes or extreme pathways to reactions necessarily working together at steady state. Finally, the aim of the third session is to discuss how large-scale experimental data can be analyzed using these structural characteristics and, in the other direction, how experimental data can be used to identify those characteristics that matter for the cell.
Contact: christoph.kaleta [at] uni-jena.de